Table of contents (best first).

[novella] Rajnar Vajra's "The Woman Who Cried Corpse" (B): Corpse
of a woman has vanished from hospital, victim's daughter is accused of
her murder by police, & a gang of badmen are after the daughter.
What's cooking?

[novelette] Kyle Kirkland's "True to Form"
(B): In a world of humans & androids that are easy to recognize as
such, someone has figured out a way to creates androids that can pass as
humans & is breeding them at will, outside of society's controls.

[novelette] Amy Thompson's "Buddha Nature" (B): Yet another "robot wants
to be accepted by a temple as a worshiper" story. In this case, robot
wants to be accepted as an acolyte by a Buddhist monastery.

I've read may be a half dozen stories of the kind, so there was no novelty value. But it's an ok read.

[novella] Edward M Lerner's "Time Out" (B): A reclusive mad scientist is building a time machine. Story is told through the eyes of his assistant. By the end of the story, we'll be told why time travel is undesirable.

This might have been an ok read at may be flash fiction length. At novella length, it was just plain boring. A rehash of many themes in time travel that have each been already done to death.